President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin shake hands during a
meeting on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany, on July
7, 2017. The two leaders are expected to meet again over the summer.
SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images
President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin will discuss
relations between the United States and Russia and a range of national
security issues when they meet in in Helsinki on July 16.
The meeting will follow a NATO summit in Brussels on July 11.
"I
think we'll be talking about Syria. I think we'll be talking about
Ukraine. I think we'll be talking about many other subjects," Trump told
reporters at the White House on Wednesday.
"Maybe something positive will come out of it," the president
said. "I've said from day one, getting along with Russia and with China
and with everybody is a very good thing. It's good for the world. It's
good for us. It's good for everybody."
Plans for the summit
came into focus after Trump's national security adviser, John Bolton,
met with Putin in Moscow on Wednesday.
Bolton told reporters in
Moscow the summit agenda would include a variety of issues, including
arms control, but the meeting would not necessarily produce any specific
agreements.
He acknowledged that any meeting with Putin is
likely to generate some "political noise" in the U.S., where Trump has
been dogged by a special counsel's probe into Russia's interference in
the 2016 presidential election.
"A lot of people have said or
implied over time that a meeting between President Trump and President
Putin would somehow prove some nexus between the Trump campaign and the
Kremlin, which is complete nonsense," Bolton said. "The president
recognizes there may be some criticism of this decision to have the
meeting. You've heard some of it here today. But what must guide his
conduct of American foreign policy is the pursuit of American national
interests. And he judges — correctly in my view — that this bilateral
summit between himself and President Putin is something he needs to do
and will do, regardless of political criticism at home."
Bolton said he discussed Russia's election meddling during his
meeting with Putin and he expected that it would come up again when
Trump and Putin meet. U.S. intelligence agencies say Russia intervened
in the campaign to boost Trump's chances, although Putin denied that
when the two leaders have met in the past.
Before a G7 meeting
earlier this month, Trump suggested that Russia should be invited to
rejoin the group. Russia was kicked out of what was then the G8 in 2014,
in retaliation for the country's invasion of Crimea.
Bolton
said he didn't discuss G8 membership with Putin but it could come up
during the summit with Trump. Most other G7 leaders have rejected the
idea of letting Russia back in, although Italy's new prime minister
appeared to entertain the suggestion.
Despite international
sanctions against Moscow for its actions in Ukraine, Syria, and
elsewhere, Bolton noted that world leaders have continued to meet with
Putin.
Bolton himself was critical of engaging with Russia
before he joined the Trump administration. But he suggested reporters
shouldn't dwell on his earlier commentary.
"I don't really
address what I've written in the past or what I've said on television,"
Bolton said during his Moscow news conference. "Right now, I'm an
adviser to President Trump. It's his agenda that we're pursuing. And
that's the agenda that I intend to advance."
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